Another cosy mystery. Book 2 of the Flora Steele mysteries. I like these, not as good as Agatha Christie but on the same wavelength. My type of mysteries. Set in England in the 1950’s, but written in 2021.
WWI is my specialty in history. This includes stories of the ordinary folk, civilians and soldiers, both sides. This is the podcast, but I’ve also got the book from the library. I think I’ll eventually buy, when it comes out in soft back.
A Jackson Brodie mystery. It’s book #6, I will probably find book #1 at some stage. Ex-detective, stolen paintings, thief in disguise, and a murder mystery weekend.
1895 Paris and a female anarchist boards a train with a bomb. It was ok. I enjoyed the notes on actual people and the event it was based on more than the actual story itself though. If I may go off-track, the story does highlight the importance of a formal education teaching critical thinking skills, rather than self-taught misconceptions and wacky understandings.
A reveal on how the identities of women have been co-opted by those intent on crafting national identities. Women such as Lady Godiva, Joan of Arc and Isabella of Castile compared to 18th and 19th Century women sich as Queen Victoria. Legacies seen from a patriarchal viewpoint.
Described as cosy and I would agree. As a Christie fan I love these types of mysteries. Sussex, 1955: When Flora Steele opens up her bookshop one morning, she’s in for the surprise of her life! Because there, amongst her bookcases, is the body of a young man, with a shock of white-blond hair. But who was he? And how did he come to be there? (Page numbers from Goodreads).